Taylor v. Carley

158 S.W.3d 1, 2004 WL 2163167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2005
Docket14-03-00661-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 158 S.W.3d 1 (Taylor v. Carley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Carley, 158 S.W.3d 1, 2004 WL 2163167 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

KEM THOMPSON FROST, Justice.

This case presents a dispute between a psychologist and his former patient. We must determine (1) whether the psychologist’s alleged negligent diagnosis caused the patient’s injury, and (2) whether the psychologist, who had referred the patient to a psychiatrist and who was no longer seeing the patient, had a duty to monitor her progress. Appellants/plaintiffs Beverly Lois Taylor and Jeffrey D. Taylor, individually and as next Mends for James Taylor, Joshua Taylor, Jacob Taylor, and Hannah Taylor, minors, and Jeffrey D. Taylor, Jr., sued appellee/defendant John W. Carley, Ph.D., a psychologist, alleging that Dr. Carley negligently misdiagnosed Beverly Taylor’s condition and failed to follow her symptoms after referring her to a psychiatrist. Dr. Carley moved for summary judgment on traditional and no-evidence grounds, and the trial court granted the motion. We conclude (1) there is no evidence that Dr. Carley’s alleged negligence in diagnosing Mrs. Taylor proximately caused her injury, and (2) Dr. Car-ley had no duty to follow or monitor Mrs. Taylor’s condition after she stopped seeing him. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. Factual and PROCEDURAL BackgRound

Mrs. Taylor’s first appointment with Dr. Carley occurred in September 1998. Mrs. Taylor consulted with him because she had just returned to full-time work outside the home, was experiencing feelings of anxiety, and having problems in her marriage. In the course of her treatment with Dr. Car-ley, Mrs. Taylor discussed her oldest son’s attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (“ADHD”). Dr. Carley eventually had Mrs. Taylor take some computerized tests, which, according to Mrs. Taylor, Dr. Car-ley said were to test for possible ADHD. Toward the end of his sessions with Mrs. Taylor, Dr. Carley diagnosed her as having attention deficit disorder (“ADD”), not hyperactivity, as well as other conditions. 1 Dr. Carley told Mrs. Taylor he wanted a psychiatrist or other medical doctor to evaluate her and determine what her medication needs might be.

Dr. Carley told Mrs. Taylor about Dr. John Steffek, a psychiatrist who rented office space from Dr. Carley and saw pa *4 tients at that location one day a week. Dr. Carley advised Mrs. Taylor that Dr. Stef-fek generally treated adolescents and children. Mrs. Taylor knew she was free to see any psychiatrist or other medical doctor she chose, but made her independent choice to consult with Dr. Steffek.

Dr. Steffek met with Mrs. Taylor in mid-December 1998. At that time, they talked about multiple issues to clarify or rule out a diagnosis of ADHD. Before meeting Mrs. Taylor, Dr. Steffek had access to Mrs. Taylor’s history from Dr. Carley, but Dr. Steffek had not arrived at the conclusion that Mrs. Taylor had ADHD. Based on his interaction with Mrs. Taylor and having her talk about questions on a printed page he gave her, Dr. Steffek concluded Mrs. Taylor exhibited seven of nine phenomena for a diagnosis of ADHD, inattentive type. 2 This was one of Dr. Steffek’s three final diagnoses, the other two being generalized anxiety disorder and mixed personality with compulsive, dependent features.

Dr. Steffek told Mrs. Taylor she needed to undergo blood tests, a urinalysis, and an electrocardiogram before he could prescribe medication. Mrs. Taylor completed the blood tests and the urinalysis, but did not have the electrocardiogram. According to Mrs. Taylor, she chose not to have the electrocardiogram because she was busy working and had five children. Dr. Steffek subsequently told Mrs. Taylor she did not need the electrocardiogram because the results of the laboratory work were favorable. Dr. Steffek then gave Mrs. Taylor Dexedrine tablets and told her to try them and also to redo the computer test with Dr. Carley after taking the Dexedrine. Mrs. Taylor reported that her husband was seeing a difference in her behavior, and the results of the re-test also showed improvement after the Dexedrine.

In mid-January 1999, Dr. Steffek first prescribed Adderall for Mrs. Taylor. 3 Dr. Steffek would write the prescriptions one way, but give Mrs. Taylor different directions for taking the medication. 4 Dr. Steffek also instructed Mrs. Taylor to gradually increase the dose, determine how she would feel, and determine whether she had any of the side-effects that typically appear with this medication. If there were no side-effects and functioning was not optimal, Mrs. Taylor was to increase the first dose of the day to attempt to get a more beneficial response. Mrs. Taylor saw Dr. Steffek again in mid-February 1999, and saw him every two months thereafter. According to Mrs. Taylor, sometime around April 1999, she started experiencing headaches and weight loss and reported these symptoms to Dr. Stef- *5 fek. There is some evidence that, at one point, Mrs. Taylor was taking twenty milligrams of Adderall in the morning and twenty in the afternoon, but that was subsequently reduced to fifteen milligrams in the morning and ten in the afternoon. 5 Dr. Steffek never checked Mrs. Taylor’s blood pressure while she was under his care.

According to Mrs. Taylor, she saw Dr. Carley two times after she started taking the Adderall, the second occasion being February 23, 1999. Mrs. Taylor did not report any problems with the medications or side effects to Dr. Carley. At the February 23 visit, Mrs. Taylor reported to Dr. Carley that she was “doing well.” Mrs. Taylor then started missing appointments with Dr. Carley. Dr. Carley wanted Mrs. Taylor to reschedule the missed appointments, but Mrs. Taylor explained to him she could not do so because she could not be missing two or three days a week going to appointments for two different doctors. By the time Mrs. Taylor started experiencing headaches and weight loss, she had stopped seeing Dr. Carley.

Mrs. Taylor testified that by September 1999, she was taking fifteen milligrams of Adderall in the morning and ten milligrams in the afternoon. On September 24, 1999, Mrs. Taylor was hospitalized with “sudden onset of confusional state, headache, and agitation.” Two computered tomography scans performed that day were normal. According to her medical record, Mrs. Taylor’s “presentation, especially the presence of hypertension and mild tachycardia, was suspected of amphetamine toxicity.” 6 Magnetic resonance imaging (“MRI”) was performed the following days. Repeat MRIs showed ischemia (restricted blood flow) of the upper medullary region. Mrs. Taylor had suffered a stroke.

Mrs. Taylor and her husband sued Dr. Carley, Dr. Steffek, three Walgreen entities, and the manufacturer and supplier of Adderral. 7 The Taylors alleged Dr. Car-ley was negligent in (1) failing to assess and evaluate Mrs. Taylor’s status and response to medical treatment and to report such findings to the physician; (2) failing to assess and diagnose Mrs. Taylor’s condition accurately; (3) failing to assess the true extent of the symptoms from which Mrs. Taylor was suffering; (4) failing, on Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W.3d 1, 2004 WL 2163167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-carley-texapp-2005.